This summer, I was one of many reporters interviewing a producer of ''House'' about what's coming this season. She apparently had a very good time toying with us, giving out dribs of information, or turning the interview around by asking what we wanted to see on the show.

TMZ.com is reporting that Reese Witherspoon and Ryan Philippe have separated. (Story here.) Have to wonder if their respective career arcs were a factor. Both good actors. But Witherspoon's got strong box office and an Oscar (although, as I said last week in a column, she was better in ''Election'' than in ''Walk the Line''). Philippe's latest, ''Flags of Our Fathers,'' is a very good movie -- directed by Clint Eastwood -- but so far proving a disappointment at the box office.

Before we get to anything else, here's the latest (and hysterically funny) check out what the ''Nobody's Watching'' gang has done with ''Lost'' in this video. Hysterically funny, and with a surprise guest.

I may have to have the Cone of Silence attached permanently to my head where TV shows are concerned. I saw nothing in real time last night because I was at another movie screening, this one for ''Stranger Than Fiction,'' the Will Ferrell-Emma Thompson comedy.

Watched ''Studio 60'' this morning, and my issues with this show are too many to go into now. Disappointment growing by the week. Wrote a HeldenFiles and Pop Quiz for tomorrow, and a mailbag column for Thursday. Came home and began watching the DVD of ''Mission: Impossible III'' for my DVD column, which -- like my mailbag -- is now going to include movies. Last night involved a trip to Cleveland to see ''Running With Scissors'' for a movie piece for Friday, which I have to write tomorrow. Annette Bening's great, the movie not. Then back home, where I finished watching ''M:I III'' and checked out some of the extras, which gets me to midnight. And, of course, during the day and night, I checked in here to read all of your comments, to post a little of my own. So the DVR is groaning from tonight's effort, and I am yawning. Good night to one and all.

My new world order continues in the office and out. On the office side, I've begun two new things: ''The HeldenFiles,'' bits and pieces about personalities and pop culture, which will run Sunday, Wednesday and Friday; the first one appeared yesterday. Today saw the first ''Talking Points,'' a roundup of news and cultural items from the weekend, for Monday morning conversations at the office. Last Friday also saw the debut of ''Pop Quiz,'' a brief daily reader question-and-answer in addition to the weekly mailbag column.

Some of you may have noticed last night that the name on this blog as changed to ''The HeldenFiles Online.'' Although I wrote about things other than TV under the old ''Beacon TV'' name, the change aims to make clearer that the blog will range wide on cultural issues. (''Kuo Time,'' below, is one example.) It's also meant to make this a companion to the print version of ''The HeldenFiles,'' a column about people in the news that will start in the Beacon Journal on Sunday.

The bride and I had a double feature of ''Grey's Anatomy'' tonight, finally catching the episode from a week ago, followed by tonight's. Regular readers here know I've been pretty obsessive about the show. But right now I'm not feeling the love for it much.

For the last several days we've been hearing about David Kuo, once the director of faith-based initiatives for President Bush, who has described in some detail his disenchantment with the Bush administration.

If you stumble across this, it's a test of a new blog format that may succeed my current ''Beacon TV'' (soon to be renamed ''The HeldenFiles Online''). I'll see be posting to the previous blog for the time being, so don't change your bookmark. In fact, even though the name is changing, we'll keep the same URL so you don't have to re-bookmark. Or whatever the right word is for that.

Last night the bride and I went to the Students Against Multiple Sclerosis lip-synching fund-raiser over at the University of Akron. I hope someone gets YouTube a video of Brian Dominguez's splendid performance. But, once again, it meant a night of delayed viewing. We checked out the ''Dancing With the Stars'' results (which had no one bounced, since the show isn't about to give up a week of ratings just because Sara Evans's divorce). The morning brought ''Lost'' and, from even farther back, ''Veronica Mars.''

Went to a screening of ''Flags of Our Fathers'' tonight and I'll have plenty to say about it soon, virtually all of it favorable. But I was also reminded of why I have often been content to watch movies at home, swapping the lack of a larger screen for a little peace. Some people can be remarkable jerks.

Bonus points for knowing the joke that goes with the punchline above. The last few days have been hectic as all get out. Last night, for example, I watched ''Studio 60'' sometime after 11 p.m. while finishing an envelope-stuffing project. I was done just in time to catch the wild end to that Bears-Cardinals game. Saturday night I was writing the thing that was stuffed, Sunday afternoon we were making copies and folding them, and that was just part of the non-job obligations of late.

With Stefani Schaefer's swift departure from Channel 5 (hastened so she can get to work on her new national show), Channel 5 has gone to one of its all-purpose players, Lee Jordan, to fill the gap. (Consumer advisory: Channel 5 has a news partnership with the Beacon Journal.) And why not, at least for the short term? She's a solid on-air presence. Anyway, here's the announcement:

I spent part of last night at a meeting, then some more watching ''Lost,'' which I'll post about later. So it wasn't until this morning that I caught up to the news that Sara Evans has dropped out of ''Dancing With the Stars'' after filing for divorce from her husband. You can find one of the stories about it here. In addition, Extra sent out this e-mail today:

I have finally sat through the 10 minutes of Diane Sawyer's interview with Mel Gibson that ''Good Morning America'' aired today, with more to come tomorrow. (I fast-forwarded through the shamelessly promotional 2 1/2 minutes ''GMA'' devoted to the Gibson story during its first half-hour, to plug the actual interview in the second half-hour.)

As late as this afternoon, NBC's consumer Web site said ''Medium'' would return after football. But with trouble spots in its drama schedule -- and with ''Medium'' fans very vocal -- the network is moving more quickly. Here is today's announcement:

During my daily -- actually, several times daily -- check of Jim Romenesko's media site, I came across a link to a note from Roger Ebert in which he talks about his most recent medical crisis. Sounds pretty harrowing, but ultimately optimistic, with a good sentiment at the end.

I've heard from folks who were quite happy that ABC was replaying ''Grey's Anatomy'' on Fridays, not least because it meant they could watch ''CSI'' on Thursday and not have to hassle with recording ''Grey's.'' Unfortunately for those viewers, the reruns have proven to be the stopgap they looked like. ''Extreme Makeover'' returns on Oct. 20. Here's the official announcement:

I've been hearing from fans of ''Smith'' (including one in a comment below) who don't understand why it was dropped. Short answer: Bad ratings. It wasn't because the show was about a criminal, since CBS knew that going in. And, given the people involved with the show, CBS probably looked for compelling evidence to keep it around. But the numbers didn't provide any. Sure, the similarly themed ''Sopranos'' worked for HBO, but HBO can get by with far fewer viewers than a broadcast network show requires -- if only because HBO viewers put cash directly in its pocket by subscribing to its programs.

Last week less than 7.2 million people watched the premiere of ''Friday Night Lights,'' which ranks among the best new shows of the season. As I have said before, it was my favorite pilot for a new series. I know that the 8 p.m. hour (on the East Coast, at least) is a brutally competitive one for TV fans. The DVR will certainly be clicking in my house at that time. But even if you have to record something else for later viewing, give ''Friday Night Lights'' a chance. I have seen tonight's episode and it is still good, thoughtful, emotional -- a deft portrayal of a small town that goes far beyond its football trappings. These are not patient times at the networks, with all five -- ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC and the new CW -- having already made changes in their fall plans. So let's not push NBC's patience by waiting awhile to watch ''Friday Night Lights.'' It deserves a look now.

I had already seen last night's ''Heroes'' but paused again for the shot of the cheerleader on the slab, because it's such a great ''holy cow'' closer. Can't wait to see what they're going to do with her next -- especially since Matt Lanter, who plays the evil quarterback, is going to be around for more episodes, and I suspect some creepy payback awaits.

As I mentioned in an earlier post, I saw ''The Departed'' recently after watching its Hong Kong predecessor ''Infernal Affairs.'' And, in another step toward writing more about movies, I filed a piece for the Beacon Journal about the two, which you can find here.

The bride and I took a Friday through Sunday break, journeying down to Hocking Hills for some peace, quiet and rest. All three were obtained. Considerable sleep, a little walking and even some reading (Calvin Trillin's ''Feeding a Yen,'' which makes me pause often because Trillin's food writing makes me so hungry, Michael Freeman's ''ESPN: The Uncensored History.'') Especially impressive: That I managed to last more than 48 hours without going on the Internet.

On ''Grey's,'' I liked the whole dating competition between McDreamy and McVet, and Kate Walsh as Addison is world class. But who couldn't guess that the guy with the seizures was going to seize as soon as he held the baby? And shouldn't someone have looked at the foster kid's abdomen a lot sooner, given how many times she said she had been hit?

In two and three-week increments, have spent something like a year of my life on TV critics' press tours, which means I have spent a lot of time in hotels, and in their elevators. This may explain why I have had some interesting encounters in elevators -- chatting with Buck Owens (whom I did not recognize), and with Robert Pastorelli and some of the guys from ''Entourage.'' And it was while waiting for an elevator that I saw an acclaimed stage actor confronted by a group of teenage girls who recognized him but could not figure out what from; he finally copped to having been on ''Who's the Boss,'' and looked even more uncomfortable as they shrieked their recognition.

Fox has a weird enough schedule anyway, with a late-summer start, a hiatus for baseball, then an overhaul in January to make room for ''American Idol'' and ''24.'' So why not change things one more time, as it will after baseball? Here's the hype...

In 2003, the first season of ''Law & Order: Criminal Intent'' was released on DVD. In 2004, the THIRD season was released on DVD, as part of a gimmicky release of what were then the most recently concluded seasons of all three ''Law & Order'' series. Now, finally, the second season will be released on DVD. Here's the announcement, with some comments following:

All right, I liked Kirk turning himself into Luke, right down to the backward cap and the ''No Cell Phones'' sign. But that was about it as ''Gilmore Girls,'' in only its second episode of the season, felt run down.

TV Tattle has a link today to a Los Angeles Times story where ''Girlfriends'' mastermind Mara Brock Akil complains about not getting enough respect from the new CW network. If you don't want to link to the story, here are the key paragraphs:

We recently put a piece about ''Little People, Big World,'' on the cover of our weekly TV supplement. I'm also posting the text here, not least because what I wrote was largely inspired by all the ''LPBW'' comments posted here on the blog. So thank you for that. And here's the column:

Here's where I get a little crazed: Last night, it was about 11 p.m. when the bride and I got back from the screening of ''The Departed,'' and I just couldn't relax. Too much Diet Coke at the movie -- it was in one of those cups you could float a paper sailboat across -- and I was just wired from watching and thinking about the movie. So, after a feeble attempt at sleeping, I settled down with my recording of the third episode of ''Studio 60.''

The bride and I went to a screening tonight of ''The Departed'' (hence my watching ''Infernal Affairs'' over the weekend). It's kind of a push which I liked better -- ''Infernal Affairs'' tells the story in a more efficient and balanced way, while ''The Departed'' lights up whenever Alec Baldwin or Mark Wahlberg takes over a scene -- and I'll get into that more later. The thing that struck me most immediately was what a TV hound I have become. I'm more comfortable watching from the couch, and the picture quality of my HD set and of most well-made DVDs is considerably better than what I saw on the big screen.

The weekend's TV included ''The Amazing Race'' (and it WAS amazing how the losing team was scammed by their ''guide''), Kent-Akron, Buckeyes, Browns, ''Everybody Hates Chris'' (still funny), ''The Game'' (not), and a DVD of ''Infernal Affairs,'' the Hong Kong-made adventure film that is the inspiration for Martin Scorsese's ''The Departed.'' Kept meaning to blog but did not get to it, since I was also working on some new job projects as well as maintaining a home life.